The New York Times is one of the newspapers of record for the United States. However, it’s history of running stories with poor sourcing, insufficient evidence, and finding journalists with conflicts of interest undermines it’s credibility when reporting on international issues and matters of foreign policy.

Late last year, the NYT ran a story titled ‘Screams Without Words’: How Hamas Weaponized Sexual Violence on Oct. 7. Recently, outlets like The Intercept, Jacobin, Democracy Now! , Mondoweiss, and others have revealed the implicit and explicit bias against Palestine that’s apparent both in the aforementioned NYT story and in the NYT’s reporting at large. By obfuscating poor sources, running stories without evidence, and using an ex-IDF officer with no journalism experience as the author, the NYT demonstrates their disregard for common journalistic practice. This has led to inaccurate and demonstrably false reporting on critical issues in today’s world, which has been used to justify the lack of American pressure against Israel to the American public.

This journalistic malpractice is not unusual from the NYT. One of the keystone stories since the turn of the century was the NYT’s reporting on Iraq’s pursuit of WMDs: U.S. SAYS HUSSEIN INTENSIFIES QUEST FOR A-BOMB PARTS, Defectors Bolster U.S. Case Against Iraq, Officials Say, Illicit Arms Kept Till Eve of War, An Iraqi Scientist Is Said to Assert. These reports were later revealed to be false, and the NYT later apologized, but not before the reporting was used as justification to launch the War on Iraq, directly leading to the deaths of hundreds of thousands and indirectly causing millions of death while also destabilizing the region for decades.

These landmark stories have had a massive influence on US foreign policy, but they’re founded on lies. While stories published in the NYT do accurately reflect foreign policy aims of the US government, they are not founded in fact. The NYT uses lies to drum up public support for otherwise unpopular foreign policy decisions. In most places, we call that “government propaganda.”

I think reading and understanding propaganda is an important element of media literacy, and so I’m not calling for the ban of NYT articles in this community. However, I am calling for an honest discussion on media literacy and it’s relation to the New York Times.

  • ahal@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    I’m not American and I almost never read the Times, so I don’t have first hand experience. But I hear the same rhetoric about outlets here in Canada.

    My take is that yes, outlets can have bias on certain issues, but that doesn’t mean we should write them off completely. Trust in media is at an all time low, journalism is struggling to survive. There’s no media outlet in the world that doesn’t make the kinds of mistakes that you outline here. The key is how do they respond to them after the fact. Do they issue corrections? How quickly? Where do they put them?

    Some of your ‘evidence’ also doesn’t seem like journalistic malpractice. For example, are they obfuscating poor sources, or not revealing an anonymous source? The latter is not malpractice. The former doesn’t sound bad either… Who decides if a source is poor? Maybe the source didn’t have much to contribute so that’s why there wasn’t much detail on their background. I’m not arguing that you’re wrong, just that as an outside observer that point doesn’t seem very bad.

    Anyway, I do think it’s important to be aware of any biases in the media we consume, so conversations like this are important. But my fear is that if the conclusion is to wholesale stop trusting the media anytime they make a mistake or a bias is revealed (I.e all media outlets), we’re going to be even more fucked than we already are.

    • intelshill@lemmy.caOP
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      10 months ago

      After the fact, it’s being revealed that their “sources” are consistently wrong and consistently in line with US foreign policy objectives.

      You can say it’s a coincidence, but…

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          10 months ago

          These are some of the most important and impactful stories since 2000. If the NYT can’t keep their journalism robust for these, what does it say about everything else?

          Oh wait, we already know: “Palestinian family collides with bullet discharged from Israeli weapon”

          • Candelestine@lemmy.world
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            10 months ago

            Nobody and no system should be expected to be perfect all the time, I would anticipate some mistakes over a course of decades.

            Have you checked for any times they were critical of US foreign policy within the same timeframe?

  • davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    But muh Media Bias/Fact Check says it checks out!

    https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/contact/

    Dave M. Van Zandt obtained a Communications Degree before pursuing a higher degree in the sciences. Dave currently works full time in the health care industry. Dave has spent more than 20 years as an arm chair researcher on media bias and its role in political influence.

    Van Zandt is some hobbyist who was in the right place at the right time: the “post-truth” moment of Clinton’s loss to Trump and the string of Russiagate conspiracy theories and Kellyanne Conway’s alternative facts and the Cambridge Analytica hysteria.

    The whole concept of the “left” or ”right“ “bias” being inversely correlated with factualness is garbage. These kinds of graphs, which try to convince us that centrism equals factualness, are garbage:

    The core bias of corporate media is the bias of the capitalist class, but people like Van Zandt don’t seem to understand this.

    The inner workings of corporate media were explained about forty years ago in Inventing Reality and Manufacturing Consent.
    A five minute introduction: Noam Chomsky - The 5 Filters of the Mass Media Machine

    • nekandro@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      Has he changed his blurb? It used to say:

      This curiosity led him to pursue a Communications Degree in college; however, like most 20-year olds he didn’t know what he wanted and changed to a Physiology major midstream.

      Implying that he changed to Physiology before graduating, and that his “higher degree” is a Bachelor’s.

  • markstos@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    I have been reading NYT’s coverage of this conflict. Their journalists seem to have a range of viewpoints and their coverage reflects that.

    Here’s a story that’s just about the level of Pro-Palestian support:

    https://www.nytimes.com/2023/11/04/us/protests-israels-gaza.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare&sgrp=c-cb

    Here: “Invading Gaza Now is a Mistake”

    https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/17/opinion/israel-gaza-invasion-mistake.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare&sgrp=c-cb

    The conflict has proved hard to cover because journalists have been targeted and killed, so there are a shortage of journalists on the ground in Gaza.

    I’ve also appreciated the times when NYT has published follow-up pieces to explain when I found case where their own reporting didn’t meet their own high standards and what they are doing about it.

    I agree we should hold them to a high standard, we should have a conversation about media literacy and be careful what we consume.

    Regarding a possible NYT ban, I think it is both important to consider their totality of coverage behold what is seen as specific mistakes. Also consider the alternatives. What English language outlets have objectively better and less biased coverage of the conflict?

    • intelshill@lemmy.caOP
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      10 months ago

      Literally any outlet that doesn’t spin bullshit sources to justify warmongering?

      Any outlet that doesn’t get an ex-IDF official to write an article on Israel’s war against Palestine?

      Just basic journalistic integrity.

  • ahal@lemmy.ca
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    10 months ago

    Regarding the WMD thing, was it proven the Times was aware of the mistakes and published anyway? Or were they also deceived by the government like everyone else?

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      Not everyone fell for the lies. It’s a re-writing of history to suggest that everyone was all aboard with the war in Iraq. That war was preceded by the largest protests ever to occur up until that point. I personally recall Hans Blix, the UN official responsible for weapons inspections in Iraq at that time, repeatedly telling us that there was no evidence of such weapons programs. The New York Times should presumably be at least as questioning as my, at the time, 18 year old self. Particularly since I turned out to be right.

      • doublejay1999@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        It’s very easy to forget how powerfully and unilaterally the government acts when manufacturing consent. Every control is exerted. The mainstream media a brought to heel. Dissenters are marginalised.

        Bush and Blair were ruthless in this respect, over Iraq. A British government office, David Kelly, killed himself over it .

      • ahal@lemmy.ca
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        10 months ago

        Good context to have!

        I’m not commenting on this particular case because I’m uninformed, the Times very well could have completely shit the bed here.

        But one difference between a news outlet and an every day citizen is that a news outlet pretty much has to report on what the government’s position is. If the white house claims there are WMD’s, that’s something the public needs to know. Of course the language around how that gets presented is everything!

        It sounds like there was too much blind trust in that statement and the language didn’t leave enough room for scepticism in this particular case. But it’s worth remembering that in other cases there’s a difference between towing the line and reporting words as a statement of fact. The fact being that the words were said but not necessarily that the words are true.

    • arymandias@feddit.de
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      10 months ago

      I forgot the name of the specific tactic, but basically what the Bush administration did was leak unsourced information to the NYT and then after the NYT published it, the Bush administration used the NYT as source for the unproven claim. They did this multiple times. The NYT was knowingly used to launder lies that led to hundreds of thousands of deaths. And they are doing it again.

      Think of how many Palestinians have been brutalized as a result of these heinous accusations. The fact that they canceled the Daily episode about this piece indicates that they knew something was fishy. The NYT is complicit.

      And finally does it matter if they are either comically inept, or criminally evil. It has the same effect on the world and there should be consequences for their actions.

    • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      They were aware the reporting was wrong and buried stories questioning the official line.

    • davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      The people who own the NYT are not deceived by the government, they collude with the government. In the words of George Carlin, it’s one big club, and you ain’t in it.

    • nekandro@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      The NYT is pretty good about domestic news. In fact, I’d say they’re one of the best for reporting US news. Internationally, they’re a fuckfest.

      • davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        It’s not great on domestic news, either, in that it slants in favor of the employer class and in opposition to the working class.

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          10 months ago

          That’s representative of US interests domestically. The NYT is specifically slanted in favour of the financial class, which you might infer from it’s name.

      • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        Idk, I generally just gave an eyebrow raised whenever I read a political nyt article, I’m perpetually aware that the nuances or implications in the article too be important to pay attention to.

    • zaphod@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      Also let’s just appreciate that the two examples cited by the poster are 1) a recent story that may genuinely be problematic (though I think it’s naive to believe either the Israelis or Hamas haven’t engaged in sexual violence given its prevalence in warzones), and 2) reporting on a manufactured war that’s now nearly 30 years old.

      It’s absurd to think you can hold the current NYT to account for actions done so long ago that many of their current journalists wouldn’t have been borne yet.

      That’s not to say the NYT doesn’t have it’s problems. It is absolutely a both-sidesism establishment paper. But if you’re gonna criticize it, at least do so with modern examples.

      • queermunist she/her@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        It’s absurd to think you can hold the current NYT to account for actions done so long ago that many of their current journalists wouldn’t have been borne yet.

        We call it a ‘newspaper of record’ based on actions done generations ago, the knife cuts both ways.

        • zaphod@lemmy.ca
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          10 months ago

          Then don’t call it that?

          If the bar is “never made a mistake or published a questionable article in the entire history of the institution”, then there’s no such thing as a “newspaper of record” and I’m fine with that. Frankly, I never liked that idea as no one, no institution, no media outlet, no person, is totally free from bias, and no one should treat any one paper as universally authoritative.

          But claiming the NYT is “unreliable” now, today, based on the actions of people who, if not dead are almost certainly retired today, is ridiculous.

          • davel [he/him]@lemmy.ml
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            10 months ago

            But claiming the NYT is “unreliable” now, today, based on the actions of people who, if not dead are almost certainly retired today, is ridiculous.

            That’s true: The paper’s symbiotic & collusive relationship with the capitalist class and the government is over 150 years old, so I don’t think it’s any more or less reliable now than it’s ever been.

      • freagle@lemmygrad.ml
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        10 months ago

        Cope harder. NYT has had CIA inside it’s operations for decades.

        https://www.nytimes.com/1977/12/27/archives/cia-established-many-links-to-journalists-in-us-and-abroad-cias.html

        https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/0277939083900833

        https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2012/aug/29/correspondence-collusion-new-york-times-cia

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/CIA_influence_on_public_opinion

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_The_New_York_Times_controversies

        You are confused when you think of media companies as free standing independent entrepreneurial phenomena that might be temporarily corrupted by the government.

        The press was originally a function of the government, an extension of writing originally being a function of the government-religion complex. By the time the colonies were being established in the Western hemisphere, the press was controlled mostly by the merchant class in England to influence public opinion towards their own enrichment, including inciting the public to demand military adventures and giving the military cover (see the Opium Wars).

        The press has, for centuries, been a part of the ruling class’s governance suite because of both it’s historical basis and it’s function in society. It’s terribly easy for the government to destroy anyone publishing against them, especially in the early days of the newly formed American state, by using accusations of sedition and direct violent confrontation. After the initial violence of the revolution, the methods of control became a blend of fiscal and grassroots violence (e.g. the KKK). As the contradictions of capitalism continued to drive the emergency of liberatory ideologies into seats of power (like the media) control needed to become more subtle, so it grew to include military intelligence, culminating (to our knowledge) in COINTELPRO, but very obviously continuing with the establishment of the Five Eyes framework and the revelations of WikiLeaks, Manning, and Snowden.

        The citizens of the USA are the most propagandized people in the entire world, and the NYT is part of that propaganda network.

  • Linkerbaan@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Any western media outlet writing a pro israel or anti Palestine article citing “anonymous sources” or not providing evidence should instantly be deleted.

  • ☆ Yσɠƚԋσʂ ☆@lemmy.ml
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    Topically, CNN did an article on that whole New York Times scandal, and they kept saying how there’s definitely a lot of evidence for that mass rape story. They just wish the NYT would report it better. And then they linked back to their own piece and The Guardian’s copy-paste job of the same hoax the NYT made up. 🤡

  • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    Like it or not, the New York Times holds the status of “Newspaper of Record”, which elevates them above traditional news sources.

    Now, as such, it’s fair to say they should be held to a higher standard than, say, your local Fox affilliate. But by the same token you can’t just discount them despite their problems both past and current. Thinking specifically of this:

    https://www.theguardian.com/media/2004/may/26/pressandpublishing.usnews

    https://theintercept.com/2023/03/30/new-york-times-iraq-war-error/

    • intelshill@lemmy.caOP
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      10 months ago

      I agree on this. For better or for worse, the NYT is representative of US news media to the world.

    • filoria@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      buddy read the article you’re posting

      read it carefully

      then ask yourself why an Iranian news agency might make sense for that news

    • المنطقة عكف عفريت@lemmy.world
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      Alright, so while you’re totes cool with posting links to a “news agency” controlled by the Iranian government, you have a bone to pick with the NYT?

      But these things are irrelevant. They could still post “propaganda sites” and NYT could still also be wrong.

    • intelshill@lemmy.caOP
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      10 months ago

      You’re saying… A member of BRICS is an unreliable source of news for news about BRICS membership?

      Edit: That Venezuela and Iran, two nations who are undoubtedly friendly with each other, make inaccurate statements about what each others’ leaders are saying? This is Iran reporting on a statement by Maduro about joining BRICS. That is the news.

    • Coasting0942@reddthat.com
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      10 months ago

      It’s a simpler: don’t trust strangers on the internet.

      Your lemmy memories should be preceded by: I heard through Lemmy

        • ComradeChairmanKGB@lemmygrad.ml
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          10 months ago

          An important facet of examining any topic is establishing a patern of behavior for those involved, whether institution or individual. The NYT complicity in the Invasion of Iraq and the subsequent crimes committed there is entirely relevant to the topic of the NYT complicity in the genocide of Palestine.

          Additionally it is laughable to pretend that Iraq is somehow ancient history when the occupation is still ongoing!

  • ursakhiin@beehaw.org
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    The core of your argument seems to be 2 separate incidents that are 20 years apart. The WMD article series is one of many series that were released by different outlets at the time because the Whitehouse did make such claims.

    I don’t know enough about the most recent article to form a serious opinion, but I did read the intercept link you posted and it appears to be entirely sourced by an interview with somebody who was fired for expressing bias outside of work. I also clicked the democracy now link and its just a paragraph stating that the intercept wrote the article in the first link but doesn’t provide anything else.

    I’m not sure these two incidents are enough of an indictment against the NYT to sway me at all. News outlets get it wrong sometimes. The question is how they handle it afterwards and 2 incidents in 20 years is hardly a pattern. The NYT is definitely leaning slightly left but is generally considered to be highly factual by most fact checkers that I’ve seen.

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      Most fact checkers don’t know shit. Fact is, these two stories have been used to justify conflicts where hundreds of thousands of people have died.

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        I think fact checkers are more reliable that the intercept article you posted, myself.

        • intelshill@lemmy.caOP
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          Surely, then, your fact checkers will mention the NYT’s failure of reporting on Iraq’s WMDs in their fact checks?

          Oh. They don’t? I wonder why.

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            I’m genuinely not sure what you’re hoping to accomplish with that argument.

            The fact checkers call them on that stuff, yes. The reliability ratings are based partially on how the editors react when they get it wrong and the NYT pretty famously apologizes and publishes updates when it happens.

    • ErisShrugged@beehaw.org
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      You’ve also got their coverage of the 2016 election, where it’s a matter of settled fact that they slept on an FBI investigation of Trump for things we now know actually happened while putting Clinton’s emails on the front page at every opportunity.

      You’ve also got them giving a platform to dreck like this - https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/27/opinion/immigration-stephen-miller.html?partner=rss&emc=rss&smid=tw-nytimes&smtyp=cur - which includes lovely bits like “The foreign-born share of the U.S. population is near a record high, and increased diversity and the distrust it sows have clearly put stresses on our politics.”

      I’m not one of those people who has accumulated an entire drawer full of examples and is able to provide you with 400 bullet points of what’s wrong with the NYT, but maybe two more will help push you to investigate a bit more? The NYT may publish left-leaning content sometimes, but they are not an actual ally of the Democrats, let alone the progressive or far left. They routinely publish Republican lies uncritically, and their perception as left-leaning is one of their best weapons.

    • Sonori@beehaw.org
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      10 months ago

      There is also the whole Transphobia thing where they do things like consistently interview people who run organizations classified as hate groups as “concerned parents” and who’s front page stories have been cited in Texas courts as evidence that allowing trans kids gender affirming care is seen by medical professionals as child abuse.